5,348 research outputs found
Coordinated thermal and optical observations of Trans-Neptunian object (20000) Varuna from Sierra Nevada
We report on coordinated thermal and optical measurements of trans-Neptunian
object (20000) Varuna obtained in January-February 2002, respectively from the
IRAM 30-m and IAA 1.5 m telescopes. The optical data show a lightcurve with a
period of 3.176+/-0.010 hr, a mean V magnitude of 20.37+/-0.08 and a
0.42+/-0.01 magnitude amplitude. They also tentatively indicate that the
lightcurve is asymmetric and double-peaked. The thermal observations indicate a
1.12+/-0.41 mJy flux, averaged over the object's rotation. Combining the two
datasets, we infer that Varuna has a mean 1060(+180/-220) km diameter and a
mean 0.038(+0.022/-0.010) V geometric albedo, in general agreement with an
earlier determination using the same technique.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (7 pages,
including 3 figures
Lattice-Constrained Parametrizations of Form Factors for Semileptonic and Rare Radiative B Decays
We describe the form factors for semileptonic B to rho l nu and radiative B
to K* gamma decays with just two parameters and the two form factors for
semileptonic B to pi l nu decays with three parameters. The parametrizations
are constrained by lattice results and are consistent with heavy quark
symmetry, kinematic constraints and light cone sum rule scaling relations.Comment: 3 pages, latex, 2 eps files, uses epsf.sty and espcrc2.sty, poster
presented at Lattice 97, Edinburgh, 22-26 July 199
Exploring Io's atmospheric composition with APEX: first measurement of 34SO2 and tentative detection of KCl
The composition of Io's tenuous atmosphere is poorly constrained. Only the
major species SO2 and a handful of minor species have been positively
identified, but a variety of other molecular species should be present, based
on thermochemical equilibrium models of volcanic gas chemistry and the
composition of Io's environment. This paper focuses on the spectral search for
expected yet undetected molecular species (KCl, SiO, S2O) and isotopes (34SO2).
We analyze a disk-averaged spectrum of a potentially line-rich spectral window
around 345 GHz, obtained in 2010 at the APEX-12m antenna (Atacama Pathfinder
EXperiment). Using different models assuming either extended atmospheric
distributions or a purely volcanically-sustained atmosphere, we tentatively
measure the KCl relative abundance with respect to SO2 and derive a range of
4x10^{-4}-8x10^{-3}. We do not detect SiO or S2O and present new upper limits
on their abundances. We also present the first measurement of the 34S/32S
isotopic ratio in gas phase on Io, which appears to be twice as high as the
Earth and ISM reference values. Strong lines of SO2 and SO are also analyzed to
check for longitudinal variations of column density and relative abundance. Our
models show that, based on their predicted relative abundance with respect to
SO2 in volcanic plumes, both the tentative KCl detection and SiO upper limit
are compatible with a purely volcanic origin for these species.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 11 pages, 4 figure
B\Bbar mixing with the bulk fields in the Randall-Sundrum model
We calculate the B\Bbar mixing in the Randall-Sundrum bulk model. In this
model, all the Standard Model fields except the Higgs can reside in the bulk.
Two suggestive models of "mixed" and "relaxed" scenarios are considered. We
find that the enhancement of the loop function is 0.51% for the "relaxed" and
1.07% for the "mixed" scenario when the first 4th KK modes are included, for a
bulk fermion mass parameter .Comment: REVTEX, 20 pages, 3 figure
Dispersion relations and soft pion theorems for K -> pi pi
We propose a new method to obtain the K -> pi pi amplitude from K -> pi which
allows one to fully account for the effects of final state interactions. The
method is based on a set of dispersion relations for the K -> pi pi amplitude
in which the weak Hamiltonian carries momentum. The soft pion theorem, which
relates this amplitude to the K -> pi amplitude, can be used to determine one
of the two subtraction constants - the second constant is at present known only
to leading order in chiral perturbation theory. We solve the dispersion
relations numerically and express the result in terms of the unknown higher
order corrections to this subtraction constant.Comment: Latex, 10 pages, 1 figure. Typo in eqs. (13,14) corrected, some
rephrasing in the introductio
Titan's atmosphere as observed by Cassini/VIMS solar occultations: CH, CO and evidence for CH absorption
We present an analysis of the VIMS solar occultations dataset, which allows
us to extract vertically resolved information on the characteristics of Titan's
atmosphere between 100-700 km with a characteristic vertical resolution of 10
km. After a series of data treatment procedures, 4 occultations out of 10 are
retained. This sample covers different seasons and latitudes of Titan. The
transmittances show clearly the evolution of the haze and detect the detached
layer at 310 km in Sept. 2011 at mid-northern latitudes. Through the inversion
of the transmission spectra with a line-by-line radiative transfer code we
retrieve the vertical distribution of CH and CO mixing ratio. The two
methane bands at 1.4 and 1.7 {\mu}m are always in good agreement and yield an
average stratospheric abundance of %. This is significantly less
than the value of 1.48% obtained by the GCMS/Huygens instrument. The analysis
of the residual spectra after the inversion shows that there are additional
absorptions which affect a great part of the VIMS wavelength range. We
attribute many of these additional bands to gaseous ethane, whose near-infrared
spectrum is not well modeled yet. Ethane contributes significantly to the
strong absorption between 3.2-3.5 {\mu}m that was previously attributed only to
C-H stretching bands from aerosols. Ethane bands may affect the surface windows
too, especially at 2.7 {\mu}m. Other residual bands are generated by stretching
modes of C-H, C-C and C-N bonds. In addition to the C-H stretch from aliphatic
hydrocarbons at 3.4 {\mu}m, we detect a strong and narrow absorption at 3.28
{\mu}m which we tentatively attribute to the presence of PAHs in the
stratosphere. C-C and C-N stretching bands are possibly present between 4.3-4.5
{\mu}m. Finally, we obtain the CO mixing ratio between 70-170 km. The average
result of ppm is in good agreement with previous studies.Comment: 51 pages, 28 figure
First Lattice Study of the Form Factors A_0 and A_3 in the Decay Bbar^0 to rho^+ l^- nubar_l
We report on a lattice calculation of the form factors A_0 and A_3 for the
pseudoscalar to vector meson semileptonic decay Bbar^0 to rho^+ l^- nubar_l. We
find that resonant (or pole-type) contributions alone are unable to describe
these two form factors simultaneously. For the quantity A_0(q^2=0), which is
important phenomenologically for the determination of |Vub|, we extract a range
of values, A_0(q^2=0) = (0.16--0.35) +0.09-0.06, where the range is due to
systematic uncertainty and the quoted error is statistical. We have also
determined A_2(q^2=0) = 0.28 +0.09-0.06 +0.04-0.05.Comment: 14 pages LaTeX209 with 5 figures from 11 encapsulated PostScript
files, using epsf.sty. Also available from
http://wwwhep.phys.soton.ac.uk/hepwww/papers/shep9601
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